Free Tashi Wangchuk

URGENT: Tashi Wangchuk, a 32-year old Tibetan shopkeeper and advocate for the rights of Tibetans to learn and study in the Tibetan language, went on trial in Yushu, Tibet on 4 January 2018, charged with ‘inciting separatism’. The trial closed without a verdict being announced. He faces a possible sentence of up to 15 years.

TAKE ACTION! Send an urgent message to 18 Foreign Ministers urging them to call for his immediate release.

Tashi Wangchuk was detained on 27 January 2016 in Jyekundo County, Yulshul Prefecture, Kham, eastern Tibet (Chinese: Yushu, Qinghai Province). He was tortured and suffered extreme inhuman and degrading treatment during the first week of detention. He was initially held in for a lengthy period in a ‘tiger chair’ where he was subjected to arduous interrogation, and was repeatedly beaten by two Tibetan police officers. His interrogators threatened him with harming his family.

Tashi Wangchuk’s relatives were not notified of his detention until 24 March 2016; a violation of Chinese law which requires that a detainee’s family be told within 24 hours of the start of captivity. He was charged in March 2016 with “inciting separatism,” and, if found guilty, faces up to 15 years in prison.

On 26 May 2017, a Communication to China by five UN Special Procedures mandate holders was made public; they expressed "serious concern at the arrest, the initial incommunicado detention and the continued detention of Tashi Wangchuk, as well as his limited right to counsel, the denial of presenting the evidence against him and the irregularities in the criminal investigation". They further expressed concern about the charge of “inciting separatism” which "criminalize(s) the legitimate exercise of freedom of expression and his defense of cultural rights", according to UN experts.

Neither Tashi Wangchuk’s indictment nor any evidence of him having committed a crime have been made public. During Tashi Wangchuk’s year in detention his lawyers, Lin Qilei and Liang Xiaojun have only been able to visit him four times (19 June, 8 & 9 September, 2 November). He had no access to his family until September 2016. He is also at risk of torture while in detention; in December 2015 the United Nations Committee Against Torture found that that the practice of torture and ill-treatment was“still deeply entrenched in [China’s] criminal justice system”, which “overly relies on confessions as the basis for convictions”. This included “numerous reports from credible sources that document in detail cases of torture, deaths in custody, arbitrary detention and disappearances of Tibetans.”

Chinese policies undermining the Tibetan language run counter to provisions in China’s own laws, specifically the Regional Ethnic Autonomy Law; protections for language and culture included in Chinese law are not implemented in Tibet. These policies also violate the international right to cultural rights of Tibetans living under Chinese rule.

Despite these provisions, Tashi Wangchuk was arbitrarily detained and charged with political crimes. In reality Tashi Wangchuk acted within his rights to express his concern publicly on the marginalisation of Tibetan language and culture, and to file a lawsuit against the PRC authorities for failing to implement the legal provisions.

Tashi Wangchuk’s arrest comes in a context of increased state repression against nonviolent activists and lawyers. In July 2015 the PRC passed a series of sweeping laws and regulations, The National Security Law, under the pretext of enhancing national security. There are fears that they can and are being used to silence dissent and crack down on human rights defenders through expansive charges such as “inciting subversion” and “separatism”. Harsh criminal sentences are imposed by the PRC on writers, bloggers, journalists, academics, whistle-blowers and ordinary citizens for peacefully exercising their right to freedom of expression. Amnesty International has documented the misuse of the various charges of “separatism” and “terrorism” to violate the rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and religion.

Tibetans face discrimination and restrictions to many of their rights, including to freedom of religious belief, expression, association and peaceful assembly. Tibetan monks, writers, protesters and activists are regularly and increasingly detained as a result of their peaceful activities.

Tashi Wangchuk’s case is indicative of this repression of human rights defenders and Tibetans, and raises real concerns about the lengths the Chinese state is prepared to go to to maintain its desired status quo.

We have to send 15,000 emails to win this campaign.

72.21%

You've already sent 10,832 of 15,000 emails.

First name *

Last name *

Country

E-mail *

Newsletter Subscription

Please tick this box if you would like to receive email updates from Students for a Free Tibet